Tag Archives: visanthe shiancoe

The NFL To Give Officials a Pep Talk

In an unprecedented move, the NFL has scheduled a conference call on Friday with every member of every officiating team, to give what has been called “a pep talk and a clean up” for recent mistakes made by a number of officials.

The officials botched two huge calls last week, one on a Ben Roethlisberger fumble called a non-fumble in Miami and one on a Visanthe Shiancoe touchdown called no-touchdown in Green Bay that ultimately changed the outcome of both games.

The league wants to clean it up.

The league had better ask one or two important questions: Who is betting on the games and/or who is getting a pay off from the gamblers? Those calls last week were so bad, and they were bad because they were made AFTER the use of instant replay, that in both cases, the games appeared to be fixed.

And it’s not always what is true, but what appears to be true. And what those two calls appeared to be last week was fishy.

On the upside, the league has $35,000 from the Brad Childress fine (he was fined for calling last Sunday’s game “the worst officiated game I’ve ever seen.” on the K-FAN post-game show), so the long distance bill is covered.

NFL Officiating Under the Microscope

Brad Childress is pissed and according to a Fox television analyst who was quoted by the St. Paul Pioneer Press — a man who used to be the NFL’s director of officiating — Childress has every right to be pissed.

In fact, the head coach of the Minnesota Vikings called Sunday night’s game in Green Bay, “the worst officiated game I’ve ever seen.”

Childress is upset about a dreadful call by head referee Scott Green, a guy who has been involved in so many questionable calls — and I use the word “questionable” in a moral sense, not in a sense of competency — that you have to wonder why he hasn’t been investigated by the NFL (and having said that, he even got the Super Bowl job this past year).

On Sunday night, Green’s field judge signaled “touchdown” on a pass from Brett Favre to Visanthe Shiancoe in the second quarter of Sunday’s game, a touchdown pass that should have given the Vikings a 21-14 lead and ultimately, should have given them the victory in what was a terrific football game.

However, Green went under the hood and reversed the call and Childress went nuts. The NFL eventually called Childress and told him it was the wrong call, but the call by Green didn’t surprise me at all. Throughout the entire game, every time his crew told him that a call was going against the Packers, he had this pained look on his face. A couple of times, it even appeared as if he was trying to talk his crew out of the call.

Fox analyst and former NFL director of officiating, Mike Pereira told the Pioneer Press on Monday: ”You go under the hood to see if there is anything obvious that shows it wasn’t a touchdown. Maybe the receiver didn’t maintain control of the ball on his way to the ground. Maybe he didn’t have total control after he hit the ground. But there was not enough there to overturn the call in my opinion.”

Pereira added: “If the original call had been an incompletion, there was enough evidence for the Vikings to successfully challenge the ruling and that they would have been awarded a touchdown.”

During his Monday news conference Childress said that Carl Johnson, the league’s director of officials, admitted that Green ”erred” in overturning the touchdown call on what was a catch by Shiancoe, according to the league. Not surprisingly, Childress said he also was told a touchdown catch by Packers tight end Andrew Quarless in the second quarter would have been overturned had the Vikings challenged it.

“It’s supposed to be irrefutable evidence,” Childress said during his Monday news conference. “The guy is looking right down on it and says it is a touchdown. You have got to show them something that says it wasn’t a touchdown. I saw him control the ball. It’s not about forearms. It’s not about hands. I was told it was about hands. If he has it in his teeth and it touches the ground and he has it when he comes up, it’s a touchdown.”

Green has made a habit of bad calls in important situations. Raising the question, “Is he the NFL’s Tim Donaghy?”

After all, it was Green who pissed off Packers fans last year when he didn’t call a face-mask penalty against Arizona Cardinals DB, Mike Adams on the final play of the Packers’ playoff loss to the Cardinals. Green and his crew also failed to call an obvious roughing the passer penalty on the Cardinals a few plays before that.

Adam Schefter of ESPN also that Green also was the referee who botched the end of Pittsburgh’s 11-10 win over the Chargers  last season, when he disallowed a touchdown at the end of the game. The only people interested in that touchdown would be people who had Pittsburgh to cover. By blowing the call, it made most bettors think that Green had something on the game.

Here is the transcript of Childress’s post-game comments on KFAN immediately following the game. This should get Childress fined, but it should also get Green fired (although it won’t):

“That’s the worst officiated game I’ve seen. That referee came over and apologized to me for not calling a hold on the scramble by (Packers quarterback Aaron) Rodgers. And I’ll tell you what, that’s his job. Protect the quarterback and look at the left tackle. Look at the left tackle hold his tail off.

“I must not understand a catch in the end zone for them to take Shiancoe’s off the board. That’s not the way it’s taught, that’s not the way we’re told. That goes back to the Tampa game that Tony (Dungy) coached years ago (and caused a change in the ruling of how the ground can alter a catch).

“You control the ball and it doesn’t make any difference if you control it with your hand or forearm. Period. That’s not the way it’s taught at our owner’s symposium and that’s wrong. That’s wrong. … They said he didn’t control it and he controlled it. The litmus is 50 drunks in a bar, those 50 drunks say that’s a catch and 50 writers in this room, you may be drunk too, but it’s a catch.”

Love How the Media Screws Up and then Blames Brett Favre … and Visanthe Shiancoe

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune printed an erroneous (fabricated?) story this week that Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre had retired. Immediately, the Associated Press and ESPN ran with it as if it was fact.

Evidently the story started with an alleged (fabricated?) text that Favre had told a friend of a friend of a good friend of a not-so-good friend that he’d said to another friend, “I’m done.” To run with a story in an actual real mainstream media publication with that kind of tweet, or whatever, should be a firing offence if it turns out the story wasn’t true. It wasn’t. Nobody was fired and the mainstream media continues to be a source that is hard to believe.

Favre, as far as anyone knows, didn’t say a word to anyone about retirement, but all week the media blamed Favre for the story. They called him a “diva” again because that’s what they like to do and the Associated Press even ran three days of stories saying Visanthe Shiancoe verified that players had received texts from Favre. Sorry, I heard the Shiancoe interview on ESPN and his exact words were, “Some players told me had texted someone and said he retired, but I he hasn’t told me.” In other words, those players had been informed of the story that was written in the Star-Tribune.

All this (fabricated?) story proved was that the Twin Cities media is under such incredible pressure to get something definitive from Favre FIRST that it has completely lost its mind. Hey, Favre could retire. His ankle could be too bashed up to play. Then again, he could show up in two weeks, ready to play. We all know that. But to say he texted or tweeted somebody with the words, “I’m done,” and then without phoning Vikings head coach Brad Childress or owner Zygi Wilf or even Favre’s brother Scott, some donkey runs with a story and some lunatic editor lets it run, is frightening.

In the meantime, the Star-Tribune continues to run with the “he texted his teammates,” lie and they all continue to blame Favre and Shiancoe for the circus.

There would have been no circus at all if the original writer of the original bit of gerbalism had called Childress or Favre.

As we’ve said here before, you can’t have a dive without a large envoy of enablers ans let’s be certain the American mainstream media is Brett Favre’s enabler.

Listen to Scott Taylor 15 times daily on NCI FM 105.5 in Winnipeg and at Streetz 104.7 in Winnipeg.

Favre Spectacular. Rice Wonderful. Defence Solid. Vikings Ready for Post-Season.

MINNEAPOLIS — While the Indianapolis Colts were blown out again and the New Orleans Saints lost their third straight, the Minnesota Vikings prepared for the NFL post-season by destroying the New York Giants.

A final score of 44-7 is one thing. The surgical beauty of Sunday’s evisceration of the Jints was even more impressive, now that the post-season looms.

And there is no doubt that the Vikes are ready for the post-season. On Sunday, Favre completed 25 of 31 passes for 316 yards, four touchdowns, no interceptions and an eye-popping 148.7 passer rating. He was replaced by Tarvaris Jackson with the Vikings leading 41-0 with 4 minutes, 39 seconds left in the third quarter.

The four touchdown passes tied Favre’s season high, and it was the sixth time he’s thrown for 300-plus yards this season. Since the end of the first half at Chicago last Monday night, Favre put up 71 points in a little more than four quarters. He completed 46 of 62 passes for 601 yards, six touchdowns and no INTs.

Funny, but it appears the mainstream media has forgotten the bullshit story it created two weeks ago, suggesting there was dissent in Minnesota. The big numbers have chased the fiction away.

Meanwhile, Favre’s brilliance — along with the brilliance of Chester Taylor, Visanthe Shiancoe, Sidney Rice, Bernard Berrian, the offensive line and a defence that appears to be adjusting to the loss E.J. Henderson –  provided the Vikings faithful fans, the 65,000 that sell out Mall of America Field at the Metrodome every single week, with something to get all giddy about.

Now that’s professional sports.

There was no coaching scared, no worry that precious Brett might get his undies dirty. This wasn’t the candy-assed approach of the lily-livered Indianapolis Colts (have they returned the ticket money from Week 15′s dishonorable debacle yet?). Vikes head coach Brad Childress sent the playoff-bound Vikings out to win a football game on Sunday and he got all $12.5 million worth out of his 40-year-old quarterback.

“It would appear that we picked up right where we left off (in the second half in Chicago),” Favre said during his post-game news conference. “I thought that what we did at the start of the game was what we needed to do. I think it’s proof of what we are capable of doing. For whatever reason we have been inconsistent at times. I think there were 20 first downs in the first half and 22 in the second half of last week’s game. That’s 42 first downs in a game or so. Not that you would expect that all of the time, but that’s what we are capable of doing.”

Nobody is quite sure what some of the other playoff-bound teams are capable of doing. The Colts, the team that threw Game 15 and allowed the New York Jets to eliminate the Houston Texans from the playoffs, were just brutal for the second straight week. Fact is, the Colts were  lucky to get past such powerhouse teams as Jacksonville (the Colts beat the Jags 14-12 and 35-31), Miami, Baltimore, New England and San Francisco, it’s hard to imagine they’ll be ready for anyone in two weeks time.

In fact, by the time the Colts play a post-season game (on Jan. 16 or 17), they will not have won since Dec. 17.

Of course, it could be worse. The New Orleans Saints have lost three straight and when they play again on Jan. 16 or 17, they will not have won a game in five weeks. The Colts and Saints will essentially be starting a new season (and not just in the hyperbolic sense) when they play their next game.

Meanwhile, Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Arizona were dreadful this week, but while Arizona played nobody in the butt-kicking they took at home against Green Bay, the Eagles went all-out in the 24-0 shellacking they received in Dallas while the Bengals played all their stars in that 37-0 whooping they suffered in New York.

Right now, the best teams in the NFC are Minnesota, Dallas and Green Bay while the best teams in the AFC are San Diego, Baltimore and the Jets.

And if anybody suggests even for one second that the signing of Brett Favre was a mistake — no matter what happens in the playoffs — then that person knows absolutely nothing about football or professional sports. Favre is spectacular and the Vikings are great to watch.

How Good is This Guy?

I knew it when I declared back in July that Brett Favre would indeed sign with the Minnesota Vikings (which, of course he did), but I must admit, after Sunday afternoon’s performance against the Seattle Seahawks not even I thought he’d be this good.

Sunday at Mall of America Field, Favre completed 22-of-25 passes (88 per cent) for 213 yards, no interceptions and four TDs as he led the Vikes to a 35-9 shellacking of the Seahawks. Those numbers are beyond remarkable. Eighty-eight per cent is the highest single-game percentage in Favre’s career. He threw touchdown passes to four different receivers — Sidney Rice, Visanthe Shiancoe, Bernard Berrian and Percy Harvin.

NFL.com reported that Favre’s previous career high was an 85.2 percent completion mark against Detroit on Sept. 20 of this year. But, amazingly, he has only completed at least 80 percent of his passes in a single game, two other times in his previous 18 seasons in the league.

Having had the opportunity to interview Favre (albeit in news conferences and scrums) on a number of occasions this season, I’ve concluded that the 40-year-old quarterback has reached a stage in his career in which every down is a bonus. As a result, he’s become more likable, more respected (if that’s possible) and perhaps even more skilled that he was when he was leading the Green Bay Packers to the Super Bowl.

In fact, on Sunday, Favre set an NFL record with his 22nd career game with at at least four touchdown passes. He and Dan Marino were tied at 21 each.

When Favre’s achievement was announced to the sellout crowd during the fourth quarter at the Metrodome on Sunday, he received a standing ovation and yet looked like a guy who had no idea what he’d done.

One gets the sense he no longer cares. At 40, he’s playing on perhaps the best team he’s ever seen — let alone been part of. In fact, if you base greatness on the number of weapons a team has, then Favre’s Minnesota Vikings might be the greatest team in the NFL today.

Frankly, it’s extremely unlikely even the unbeaten New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts can claim to have seven of the most potent weapons in all of football, but Bret Favre can. In fact, does any team have more great offensive players than Minnesota: Favre, Harvin, Rice, Berrian, Peterson, Taylor and Shiancoe. No team in the NFL can touch that group.

The post-season is going to be fantastic.

Crowd Aflutter All Day. Waiting for “Their” Brett.

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — Brett Favre will wear No. 4 for the Minnesota Vikings tonight when the Vikes meet the Kansas City Chiefs at the Metrodome.

The myth that “most” Vikings fans don’t want Favre to be their favourite team’s quarterback appears to be just that: a big, giant, stupid myth.

“I’m going to watch Brett throw seven or eight touchdown passes against the Packers this season and wallow in it,” said Doug Spooner, who has been tailgating outside the Metrodome since 7 a.m. “I hated him in Green Bay, but he’s not in Green Bay anymore. Professional football is a business. It’s kind of like marriages. He had 15 or 16 years married to the Packers and good for him. But he’s divorced from the Packers now and after a brief fling with the Jets, he’s married to us. We love him. And to Packers fans I say, ‘Enjoy Aaron Rodgers.’ This isn’t personal, it’s a business.”

Or a marriage. Or whatever.

Tonight, Favre will make his debut in Minnesota and fans are hoping for two things to happen (a) that he starts and (b) that head coach Brad Childress introduces the offence before the game so the fans can cheer their lungs out for their new hero.

It was suggested earlier today, by an older fan tailgating in front of the Dome, that he would have liked to see Tarvaris Jackson or Sage Rosenfels get a chance to be the team’s WB, but when it was presented to him that the Vikings don’t have a chance to go to the Super Bowl with Rosenfels or Jackson at the helm and at least they have some chance with Favre, he relented.

“Yeah, you’re right,” he said. “this could be a really good team.”

In Minnesota this year, with the signing of Brett Favre, it’s already being billed as “Mission: Miami.”

That’s because, with Favre, alongside Chester Taylor, Adrian Peterson, Bobby Wade, Bernard Berrian, Percy Harvin, Sidney Rice, Visanthe Shiancoe and that monster defence led by Jared Allen and Antoine Winfield, the Vikings have a legitimate chance to get to the Super Bowl.

And it all starts tonight.

We’ll have reports throughout the evening.

Jackson benched. Frerotte will start against Carolina.

Minnesota Vikings head coach Brad Childress has made a decision. Gus Frerotte will start at quarterback this Sunday.

 

Apparently, this 0-2 start is Tarvaris Jackson’s fault. Apparently, it’s Tarvaris Jackson’s fault even though his receivers can’t catch (see: Bernard Berrian and Visanthe Shiancoe*) a cold and his coach calls all the plays anyway.

 

So this Sunday afternoon against the Carolina Panthers, 37-year-old Gus Frerotte will start at QB for the Vikings. One hopes this will be a one-week move.

 

The Vikings future is either Jackson or John David Booty. But Gus Frerotte? Remember, he’s 37-years-old.

 

Brad Childress, the one-time offensive co-ordinator of the Philadelphia Eagles and we hear, a quarterback coach of some renown, has had nothing but trouble with quarterbacks in Minnesota. When he arrived, he let Daunte Culpepper go and went with 37-year-old Brad Johnson. Then he drafted Jackson and went with him — or Brooks Bollinger — until now. Now he’s going back to a 37-year-old again.

 

Oh, and when is Jared Allen going to sack somebody? One in two weeks ain’t enough for what they’re paying this guy. 

 

The Vikings have the best runningback in the game in Adrian Peterson and a pretty interesting young quarterback in Jackson, but Brad Childress is a dud. When he goes, the Vikings will get going.

 

(*Just a thought. I could have caught the pass Shiancoe dropped in the end zone.)  

 

No quit in Colts. Vikings blow 15-0 lead, lose 18-15 in fourth quarter collapse.

MINNEAPOLIS — There was absolutely no quit in the Indianapolis Colts offence on Sunday afternoon. 

 

After trailing for the entire game, the Colts put up 18 unanswered points in the second half, 11 in the fourth quarter, as the Colts came from behind to defeat the Minnesota Vikings 18-15.

 

The Vikings had built a 15-0 lead in the third quarter on a five Ryan Longwell field goals (of 45, 27, 53, 46 and 28 yards) but without any touchdowns, the Vikes simply didn’t get far enough ahead of Peyton Manning and the Colts, 

 

“I’m very proud of our effort today,” said Colts head coach Tony Dungy in a strangely quiet Colts locker room after the game. “We never got discouraged even though we were down 15-0 and I think a lot of that had to do with the fact we didn’t give up a touchdown. We had this feeling that if we hold them to field goals, then we can still catch them. It was great to see us win that game even though we continued to make a lot of mistakes.”

 

This was a huge win for Indy. As Dungy pointed out, “It’s important to get to 1-1 with Jacksonville next week.”

 

“That’s a big inter-divisional game for us and being 0-2 and facing those guys (the Jaguars) would have been really tough,” Dungy added. “What we take out of this victory is that we kept it close enough to win.”

 

Not surprisingly, the Colts comeback was led by quarterback Peyton Manning who played almost flawlessly in the final quarter to give the Colts their first win two starts this season.

 

On the final Indianapolis drive — right after the Colts defence stopped the Vikings inside their own five — Manning got Indy into  position for Adam Vinatieri to kick a 39-yard field goal with three seconds left on the clock to win it. 

 

On a third-and-nine, Manning threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne in the fourth quarter to tie the game, after Joseph Addai had run a yard for a disputed touchdown in the third quarter (not one replay showed clearly that the football ever got near the plane of the goal-line let alone crossed it).

 

With the win, Manning avoided the first 0-2 start since his rookie season in 1998. Yesterday Manning completed 26-of-42 passes for 311 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

 

“It just took a long time for us to get going,” Manning said afterward. “That’s two games in a row that we just didn’t come out firing on all cylinders. We’ll have to work on that.”

 

The Vikings, meanwhile, wasted an outstanding defensive effort and a particularly solid bit of work from tailback Adrian Peterson. Peterson rushed for 160 yards while Jared Allen, the multi-million dollar free-agent defensive end, who was acquired in a trade with Mansas City in the off-season, had three tackles and his first sack as a Viking.

But as the Colts’ Canadian offensive lineman, Calgary’s Dan Federkeil pointed out, the Vikings tired in the fourth quarter. 

“I’m really tired, but I don’t think I’m as tired as those guys (the Vikings defence),” said Federkeil, the University of Calgary grad who starts at right guard for the Colts. “That was a tough game today, but if you look at the way their defence played in the first quarter, compared to the fourth quarter, there was just no comparison. They tired and we were able to hang in there long enough to get the offence going.”

Vikings fans, in a loud, sold out Metrodome, really wanted to blame quarterback Tarvaris Jackson for the loss, but it was hardly his fault. Bernard Berrian, who was paid $16 million as a free-agent this past off-season, dropped three passes right in his hands. Visanthe Shiancoe dropped a perfect pass in the end zone. With any kind of help, Jackson could have been the hero.

The Vikings, now 0-2, face Carolina at the Metrodome next Sunday.

Could the Vikings be the best team in the NFC? Probably not, but they should be around in January.

When your quarterback is Tarvaris Jackson and you’re thin at half-a-dozen important positions, it’s unlikely you’ll be the team to beat in any league. Even if you happen to reside in the less-than-frightening NFC North.

 

However, all things being equal, the Minnesota Vikings should make some noise this coming National Football League season. After all…

 

The Vikings made an outstanding off-season acquisition by getting defensive end Jared Allen, the league’s sack king, from the Kansas City Chiefs for a couple of first-round picks. It was a good deal for the Vikings, a team that believes it can win right now. First round picks are obviously important, but if a team can acquire a player who can help it win right now, it’s a deal that has to be done. As most NFL coaches know, there might not be a next year, at least if you don’t win now.

 

The Vikings also acquired unrestricted free agents Bernard Berrian from the Chicago Bears and  unrestricted free agent Madieu Williams from the Cincinnati Bengals. Throw Berrian into the mix with Sidney Rice and Bobby Wade and the Vikings receiving corps is solid. Toss in Chester Taylor and Adrian Peterson at runningback and there might not be enough footballs in the Twin Cities to make everyone happy. 

 

The offensive line of Jim Kleinsasser or Visanthe Shiancoe at tight end, Ryan Cook at right tackle, Anthony Herrera at right guard, Matt Birk at centre, Steve Hutchinson at left guard and Bryant McKinnie at left tackle is well above average and the kick and punt return teams are passable.

 

On defence, the front seven is very good with Jared Allen at left end, Pat Williams at left tackle, Kevin Williams at right tackle, and Ray Edwards at right end. The linebackers are Ben Leber at WILL, E.J. Henderson at MAC and Chad Greenway at SAM. However, lose one starter and the whole thing could come apart. The Vikings defensive front seven — healthy — is very, very good. It’s so thin and unproven, however, that injuries could rip it apart 

 

The defensive secondary is led by Darren Sharper at strong safety, with Madieu Williams at free safety and Antoine Winfield and Cedric Griffin on the corners. Marcus McCauley will see a lot of time in nickel and dime packages.

 

On the surface, and on paper, this team is pretty good. The key to the Vikings’ 2008 season, however, is health. If Tarvaris Jackson is healthy (he was 8-4 when he started last year), if Adrian Peterson stays healthy and if the defence stays healthy, the Vikings will challenge the Giants, Bucs, Seahawks and Redskins in the NFC.

 

If injuries strike down the important players on this team, the Vikings will find themselves battling Detroit for .500 and a trip to Giants Stadium to get smoked in the opening round of the playoffs.

 

Thousands of Winnipeggers head to the Twin Cities for Vikings football every year and I must admit, it’s been a few years since I liked my regional team at the start of a season.  

 

But I do like a healthy Minnesota Vikings team. In fact, I like them to challenge in the NFC.

 

Injuries? Well, then it could get ugly.